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    Pull (A Seaside Novel Book 2)

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      of the street.

      I’ve been at it for around five days now. Five days of pure

      hell with tourists dodging me and paparazzi grinning as they

      snapped my photo. The first day hadn’t been so bad — nobody had

      known it was me, thanks to the over-large taffy visor. I wasn’t

      really sure if it was something to be thankful for, considering

      satellites could pick up my beacon of bright fuchsia on the visor,

      but whatever.

      The second day was by far the worst. Cameras went off like

      wildfire, and I’m pretty sure that a chick tried to stick taffy that I

      had touched down her shirt. I didn’t even want to know the reason

      behind that one.

      People gathered around. They expected me to sing the jingle,

      like always. I wanted to kill myself. Why didn’t I die in that

      accident?

      “Seaside Taffy,” I began, my voice cracked. It hadn’t cracked

      since I was twelve. Again, I wanted to die. “Loads of fun, in your

      tummy! Yum, yum, yum…” I swear I could feel Bob snickering

      from twenty feet away; it never got old. “Ice cream, taffy, treats

      galore! Don’t forget to stop at our store!” I gave a dramatic bow.

      I expected applause, or at least some sort of

      acknowledgement that I had, in fact, just given the best

      performance of my life.

      What did I get? One solitary clap. One person. I cringed,

      thinking of the pity clap. It’s the type of applause every performer

      dreads hearing. Swearing, I turned around. It was a girl. She looked

      about as old as a first grader.

      “Want some taffy?”

      I held out a piece of taffy, and the mom suddenly looked

      horrified, like I was planning on putting a taffy trail all the way to

      my car in order to abduct her child.

      They hurried away, and I was stuck again with a crowd of

      people trying to get around me while I shook my bucket. “Seaside

      Taffy!” I yelled louder this time and threw my hands out in the air.

      Might as well commit, since this was my hell for the next few

      months.

      “Seaside Taffy!” I flailed my arms again and a piece of taffy

      went flying out of my hand, right into the back of someone’s head.

      Great, add assault to my record.

      When the person turned around, I was a little shocked,

      because to be honest, I thought I had hit some punk kid.

      Not. The. Case.

      “Seriously?” The girl stomped toward me, all five feet of her,

      and glared. She was wearing a hat that said The Best Taffy in the

      World and an oversized sweater, leggings, and boots.

      “It slipped,” I offered lamely.

      She reached for my bucket. I jerked back. “Nobody touches

      the bucket.”

      Wow. I was so ashamed of myself that I wanted to jump into

      the bucket and hide. Was I really getting possessive over my

      bucket? Like some homeless man with his cart?

      The girl reached for the bucket again.

      I snapped. “What’s your problem?”

      “My problem?” she repeated, her eyebrows shooting to the

      top of her forehead. Damn, she had pretty eyes.

      I nodded. Since the accident I hadn’t written one damn song,

      so at the moment words weren’t really my thing, and I was

      shamelessly checking her out.

      “My problem…” She laughed bitterly. “…Is that the minute

      your punk rocker self got into this town, our business suffered, and

      you don’t even take it seriously!” She put her hands on her hips

      and scowled. “And now you’re working my corner!”

      “Whoa!” I laughed. I couldn’t help it. “I’m sorry. Your

      corner? What? Is this Pretty Woman or something?”

      “Did you just call me a prostitute?”

      Yes. Yes, I did. “Nope. More like a call girl. Prostitutes don’t

      dress like blind middle schoolers.”

      “Agh!” She swatted my bucket, making all the candy clatter

      to the ground. Amused, I crossed my arms and watched the fire

      blaze through her eyes. Really it was a pity she dressed so horribly,

      and that she was wearing that awful hat. Though I guess my visor

      wasn’t any better, but still… I made it look good.

      “Just watch it.”

      Brawl alert. I almost expected people to start coming out of

      the alleys with toothpicks in their mouths and newspapers in their

      hands to watch the entertainment.

      How the hell did I get stuck in a Broadway musical?

      Since I was committing to the whole Seaside Taffy act, might

      as well commit to this one too. “Noted, Shop Girl. Noted. Now run

      along.” See? I could be territorial.

      Her eyes widened, and for a second I was shocked again at

      how pretty she was. With a grunt and a cute little curse, she

      stomped off across the street to the competing taffy store.

      I waved in her direction and started the jingle all over again.

      This time really committing by way of throwing in a few AD2

      dance moves that I knew could likely land me in prison if I moved

      too hastily in the wrong direction.

      Three hours later I was seriously rethinking this whole job

      business. It started to rain shortly after my dancing began. No

      doubt people thought it was because of my inability to keep my

      hips from moving with the stupid candy bucket. Great, so I was

      doing a taffy rain dance.

      With a sigh, I readjusted the visor and tried to protect the

      taffy bucket. If my only job was to sell taffy and get people into the

      store, then I didn’t want to be the one loser who got the taffy wet

      and single-handedly took down the longest running taffy store in

      the history of Seaside, Oregon.

      Thankfully, Bob must have sensed my plight, or maybe he

      was tired of me texting him every two seconds asking him for an

      umbrella. I knew it was pathetic, and okay maybe a little bit

      ridiculous, but I was beyond drenched. He motioned for me, and I

      began to walk toward him, but he pointed at my chest.

      My teeth chattered as I looked down at my shirt. I was

      successfully showing everyone with two eyes my nipple ring

      through my tight, wet t-shirt.

      If the mom from earlier was to come by now, she’d be

      horrified. And I’d be put in prison. Not because I had a nipple ring,

      but because this hell-hole of a town was so backward that she’d

      probably assume I was some sort of drug addict.

      Which was only sort of true.

      Anyway, anything would be better than the pouring rain —

      or Seaside for that matter.

      Ah, prison. Such a pipe dream. At least it’s warm there.

      “You’re getting the taffy wet,” a female voice said from

      behind me.

      Slowly I turned around. It was the big-eyed girl from before.

      Only now she was wearing a slick rain coat and rain boots.

      “Caught that, did you?” I sneered. I wasn’t sure why I was

      so irritated. Maybe it was the rain. Maybe it was withdrawals from

      drugs. But I was pissed that the same girl who verbally attacked me

      from earlier would not only come back for more, but blatantly tell

      me something I already knew.

      “I’m not stupid,” I said, shaking my head while still tryi
    ng

      to shield the bucket with my body.

      “Sure about that?” she asked, folding her arms.

      “Are you seriously going to stand out here in the rain and

      challenge my intelligence?”

      “That depends.” Her lips turned upward into a shadow of a

      smile.

      Fine, I’ll bite. “On what, sweetheart?”

      “Are you going to stand in the rain or move two feet and

      stand underneath the overhang from the building?”

      Shit. I looked up. Sure enough there was a healthy overhang

      that could have been shielding me from the rain for the past two

      hours.

      I shrugged, feigning nonchalance. “I like the rain.”

      She bit her lip and looked around. People walked around us

      with their umbrellas, all trying to duck into the shops until the rain

      stopped. I shivered in response and waited for her to say

      something.

      “You chose the right place to be then.”

      If she only knew I had no choice whatsoever in the matter.

      “Yup, guess I did.” Seriously I was getting nowhere with this girl.

      All flirting genes apparently died in the car accident, while I was

      left very much alive and very much a loser. What a bright future I

      had!

      I walked underneath the overhang and gently pulled her to

      my side. I could see drops of water fall out of my messy blond hair

      and onto my nose. “What’s your name?”

      She shrugged. “That’s not important.”

      Okay, different tactic. “Why the sudden Good Samaritan

      act?”

      She laughed. “Ah, so he has read the Good Book.”

      “Once or twice.” I grinned seductively.

      “Then you should get your story straight.”

      “Pardon?” I had the sudden feeling I was way out of my

      league. Trapped, without a way out.

      “I wasn’t coming to rescue you.”

      “So you were just going to walk by?”

      She threw her head back and laughed, causing the hood of

      her jacket to fall back. Golden brown hair cascaded down her back.

      My mouth dropped open. She really was a beautiful girl.

      “Actually…” She placed a hand on my arm. “I was thinking

      of beating you and then passing you by.”

      “And what purpose would that serve?” I smiled. I couldn’t

      help it.

      “I would feel better.”

      “And I would be beaten on the side of the road? Is my lot in

      life to be killed by roads or something?”

      “Huh?” Her eyebrows drew together.

      “You don’t watch much TV, do you?”

      She shrugged. “We don’t have a TV.”

      “Internet?” My mind was seriously going to explode. How

      did she live?

      “Nope.”

      “Phone?” I was grasping at straws here.

      “For our house?”

      I leaned in, my eyebrows raised up as if to say, Duh.

      And again her teeth held captive her bottom lip as she

      looked away in thought. “I think we used to. But now we just have

      cell phones.”

      “Thank God!” I shouted a little too loudly.

      She shook her head like I was the weirdest person on the

      planet.

      “I, umm…” I shifted the bucket to my other arm and

      scratched my head. “What I meant was…” Channel the Bible. “You

      should be thankful, or blessed, or something that you have, um,

      technology?” Yes, Demetri, she’s going to be eating out of your sticky

      taffy hands in no time.

      “Right.” She chuckled and looked away. “Well, guess I’ll see

      you later.”

      As she walked off, she stopped in her tracks and turned

      around. “By the way, I really did have a reason for coming out

      here… you know, other than to cause physical harm.”

      “Oh yeah?” I grinned slyly and winked, waiting for the

      inevitable.

      “Yeah.” She nodded her head and pointed behind me “Your

      car’s about to be towed. It’s parked in the handicap spot.”

      Chapter Three

      Alyssa

      It was harder than I thought. Talking to him, I mean. To be

      honest, I hadn’t any idea how famous he was until some girls I’d

      graduated with ran into the shop and began giggling like little kids.

      That was kind of how my life was, though.

      Ever since the accident two years ago, I felt shut out of

      everything. Like I was a shadow going through the motions. Trying

      to smile at all the right times, and laugh when it was expected. I

      was the best worker my parents could ask for. I was first to arrive,

      last to leave. First to take up someone else’s shift. I even graduated

      early, so I wouldn’t have to be around the reminders anymore.

      I liked life better that way. Predictable.

      When you planned things, well, it was almost like some

      cruel joke from God. That once you told Him your plans, He’d try

      to ruin them. My parents said it wasn’t God’s fault — they also said

      it wasn’t mine. Did that make it Brady’s?

      I shoved my hands into my pockets and hurried into the

      store. Rain always depressed me. That meant I was living in the

      worst place on the planet. If I needed cheering up, I had to go

      tanning in order to soak up some fake sunlight.

      Last Christmas my parents even put special lights in my

      room, so I would smile more.

      I’ve smiled less ever since.

      Well, until five days ago.

      When that idiot rock star actually stood on a street corner

      and sang about Taffy, and then proceeded to roll his hips to the

      beat in his own head, I wanted to call him a dang fool, but I

      couldn’t pull my eyes away. Something about him was magnetic —

      which should have been my first clue to stay away.

      Brady had been magnetic too. He was perfect, charismatic,

      the star of the football team.

      And look where that love got me.

      A year out of high school, still living with my parents, and

      the inability to drive anywhere more than an hour away for fear

      that I would have a panic attack and die.

      I pushed the door to my parents’ store open. The bell jingled.

      That idiot had started work today, and our sales had never been

      worse. He was such a spectacle that even people who didn’t know

      his music wanted to go check out the taffy store. Which was great

      for our competitors, crappy for us. It’s not as if I could just find

      some famous person and beg them to wear one of our shirts and

      throw taffy at people. What the heck was he doing anyway? I even

      watched him schmooze an old lady. Did the guy have any shame at

      all?

      I would die before I let anything happen to my parents’

      livelihood, and I would happily take Demetri with me. It wasn’t as

      if I had anything exciting going on now.

      Shoving the door to the counter away, I went back to the

      stool and picked up my cell. Ten missed calls.

      “Crap.” I quickly scrolled through the missed numbers.

      It was Mrs. Murray, my counselor. I looked at the clock on

      the wall. “Crap!” I said again, grabbing my keys and running for

      the door. “Dad! I’m going to be late for my appointment!”

      He appeared from the back room. �
    �Oh, okay, Honey. You

      need me to drive you?” His eyes briefly held mine before looking

      down at the ground. He knew how uncomfortable cars made me

      after everything that had happened.

      “Um, no. I’ll be fine. It’s only a few miles away. Love you!” I

      heard him tell me to be careful as I ran out the door.

      ****

      I ran into the large beach house and practically beat down

      my counselor’s door.

      “Alyssa! I was worried you weren’t going to make it.” Mrs.

      Murray was in her late forties and wore spectacles that constantly

      slipped down her nose. Her brown hair was always in a bun, and

      she always dressed as if she was in a hurry. In fact, she did

      everything like she was in a hurry. Everything but the listening and

      talking part of her job. I imagined she would probably work in her

      sleep if she could.

      I gave her a tight smile. “Yeah, well, I’m here.” If I didn’t

      show, she would just tell my parents, and then I’d be on suicide

      watch for no reason. At least that was the fear. It wasn’t as if she

      could do that based solely on the fact that I didn’t show up. But last

      time I didn’t show up… well, let’s just say my parents caught me in

      my bathroom staring at a bottle of ibuprofen and flipped. I told

      them I had a headache, but that was the exact moment my dad also

      asked me to open my hand. I swear the bottle had spilled, and I

      was just trying to put the pills back in. But they didn’t believe me.

      Nobody did. Story of my life.

      The smell of peppermint tea greeted me as I waltzed into the

      small office and took a seat on the leather couch. Mrs. Murray did

      an amazing job with the ambiance. I could almost forget that she

      was a shrink, and I was there to tell her all my innermost secrets

      and feelings — almost.

      “So.” She fell into the leather chair across from me and

      pulled out her notepad. “We’re almost to the two-year anniversary

      of the incident.”

      I wanted to give some sort of snide remark. I mean, hello? I

      was living this nightmare. Believe me, I knew exactly what the day

      was. I knew exactly how many days I had left, and even if I could

      forget, my nightmares constantly reminded me of the hell I was

      living every single day.

      “Yup.” I managed to shrug nonchalantly. I should have been

      an actress. With a quick smile I leaned back onto the couch and

      exhaled, knowing what she was going to ask next.

     


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